Monolayer-Scale GaN/AlN Multiple Quantum Wells for High Power e-Beam Pumped UV-Emitters in the 240-270 nm Spectral Range.
Valentin JmerikDmitrii NechaevKseniya OrekhovaNikita PrasolovVladimir KozlovskyDmitry SviridovMikhail ZverevNikita GamovLars GriegerYixin WangTao WangXinqiang WangSergey IvanovPublished in: Nanomaterials (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
Monolayer (ML)-scale GaN/AlN multiple quantum well (MQW) structures for electron-beam-pumped ultraviolet (UV) emitters are grown on c-sapphire substrates by using plasma-assisted molecular beam epitaxy under controllable metal-rich conditions, which provides the spiral growth of densely packed atomically smooth hillocks without metal droplets. These structures have ML-stepped terrace-like surface topology in the entire QW thickness range from 0.75-7 ML and absence of stress at the well thickness below 2 ML. Satisfactory quantum confinement and mitigating the quantum-confined Stark effect in the stress-free MQW structures enable one to achieve the relatively bright UV cathodoluminescence with a narrow-line (~15 nm) in the sub-250-nm spectral range. The structures with many QWs (up to 400) exhibit the output optical power of ~1 W at 240 nm, when pumped by a standard thermionic-cathode (LaB6) electron gun at an electron energy of 20 keV and a current of 65 mA. This power is increased up to 11.8 W at an average excitation energy of 5 µJ per pulse, generated by the electron gun with a ferroelectric plasma cathode at an electron-beam energy of 12.5 keV and a current of 450 mA.